Anywhere along tract. Means: malformed part of the urinary tract, otherwise known as congengenital deformity, +may or may not be serious.Can be genetic or something "out of the blue".Examples:congenital cystic kidneys where one or both kidneys consist of a collection of cysts.Hydronephrosis: kidney swollen by blockage.Bladderreflux-valves malformed + permit urine to back up.Urethral valves-urinary blockage to outflow.

Too many. There are too many urinary malformations to list in the amount of space available. The malformations may vary with the gender of the subject. It may be urinary reflux, excystrophy of the bladder, persistent urachal duct, epispadias/hypospadias, urethral stricture, fistulas etc.

Here is ... Urinary tract malformation may be defined as any inborn structures of urinary tract like their shape, location, size, number, function, etc. which deviate from their supposed-to-be, but their timing of expression as a disease may widely vary along life path among individuals.
Read more...

Bad Luck. I am assuming that you are referring to a congenital anomaly (something you were born with) such as double ureter, double kidney, abnormal shaped kidney to name a few. These are usually random events with no family history. It all happened when you were a tiny little embryo in your mother's uterus!
Read more...

Possibly. Depending on the type of malformation, it could be correctable with surgical reconstruction, stent placement or other methods. Discuss this with your doc, who will likely send you to a urologist for further evaluation.
Read more...

Here is ... Urinary tract malformation may be defined as any inborn structures of urinary tract like their shape, location, size, number, function, etc. which deviate from their supposed-to-be, but their timing of expression as a disease may widely vary along life path among individuals.
Read more...

Bad Luck. I am assuming that you are referring to a congenital anomaly (something you were born with) such as double ureter, double kidney, abnormal shaped kidney to name a few. These are usually random events with no family history. It all happened when you were a tiny little embryo in your mother's uterus!
Read more...

Possibly. Depending on the type of malformation, it could be correctable with surgical reconstruction, stent placement or other methods. Discuss this with your doc, who will likely send you to a urologist for further evaluation.
Read more...